The
ABET Annual Meeting is an important gathering of educational,
governmental, and industrial leaders from the ABET disciplines.
The focus changes annually, but always features top-of-mind issues
in academe. The Annual Meeting takes place during the last week
of October and is held at various locations across North America.
ABET's Commission Summit and
Faculty Workshop on Assessing Program
Outcomes are also
held in conjunction with this important event.
You need to be there.
The 2008 ABET Annual
Meeting will be a special one. In Louisville, we will explore some
of the most dynamic changes taking place in technological education
today. Then, we will work to determine the impact of those changes
on the foundation and framework of quality assurance. All attendees
will be active participants. Facilitated breakout sessions will
engage us in exploring the important questions posed on the opposite
page. Our product will be recommendations for action. This is an
opportunity to help drive the future of ABET and technological
education. Will you be there?
Topics
Anticipating Needed Competencies:
Knowledge in applied science, computing, engineering, and technology
is expanding faster than can be absorbed by our undergraduate
curricula. Several proposed responses to this dilemma have been made
in recent years; yet, no consensus has been reached on how to
proceed. Key to determining next steps is identifying those
competencies that future first professional degree graduates will
need to succeed in the ABET professions. Only then can the
technological community propose educational sequences and
disciplinary structures that are able to respond to those future
needs. During this session, participants will identify the needed
professional competencies and then consider appropriate educational
frameworks.
Adapting to Millennial Learning Models:
Learning styles and expectations of today’s undergraduates challenge
current instructional delivery modes and traditional college
educational paradigms. Coming generations will be adept at learning
asynchronously—podcasting, streaming video, trillions of bytes of
information on anything at the click of a mouse—leading interactive
virtual lives—gaming, social networking, file-sharing—and diving
into and out of complex subject areas and contexts seemingly without
any sequential logic. The pervasiveness of educational technology
does make it possible to build a more flexible and responsive
educational structure to meet the needs of students. This session’s
participants will consider how the traditional educational paradigm
must change to do so.
Organizing to Improve the Pipeline: The
technological professions are on the verge of a crisis: Without
adequately prepared, diverse students flowing into our technical
programs, our professions will fail. Billions of dollars have
already been invested in improving the current reality. Both
innovative and well-tested approaches have been taken by thousands
of concerned entities. Yet, overarching success still looms beyond
reach. Although the issue of diversity is being worked by many
organizations, institutions, government, industry, K-12 educators,
and other interested parties, it is not often done in concert.
During this session, participants will formulate strategies to
address these issues and develop new alliances along the way.
Rethinking Quality Assurance Accreditation:
is a key driver of program curriculum, policy, structure, and
innovation. ABET must ensure that its quality assurance paradigms,
mechanisms, and policies are in line with what is best for the
professions it serves. This session will engage ABET leadership,
constituents, and topic experts in developing a framework for
educational quality assurance in the years to come, a framework that
will be able to adapt to new paradigms and encourage innovation
while maintaining the quality ABET accreditation signifies.
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Schedule
8:30AM-9:30AM
Keynote Session
James
J. Duderstadt, President Emeritus of the
University of Michigan and author of Engineering for a Changing
World: A Roadmap to the Future of Engineering Practice, Research,
and Education, will kick off the 2008 ABET Annual Meeting by
offering a provocative view of the future of technological education
based on the findings of his report.
9:45AM-Noon
Anticipating Needed Competencies
-
What competencies must the
professionals in the technical fields possess in 2030 to compete
in a world marketplace?
-
What disciplinary boundaries
can handle the dynamic knowledge-base of our professions while
still providing our students enough value-added education to
keep them viable in the knowledge-driven economy?
-
Will the market drive
stakeholders (institutions, programs, students, industry) to
accept or block needed changes?
Computing and
Applied Science Breakout
Engineering and Technology Breakout -
Introduced by
Jeff Russell of the University of Wisconsin-Madison
Noon-1PM
Lunch
1PM-2PM
Setting the Stage for Concurrent Sessions
Daryl Chubin of the
American Association for the Advancement
of Science (AAAS),
Irving Pressley McPhail
of the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering (NACME), and
Diana Rhoten of the
National Science Foundation (NSF) set the stage for Thursday afternoon and
Friday morning concurrent sessions.
2PM-4PM
Adapting
to Millennial Learning Models
-
What
characteristics will describe students of the future
(demographics, learning styles, etc.)?
-
Will
educational paradigms change to meet the next generation’s need
for flexible and responsive pedagogies?
-
How will the
pervasive access to technology require programs to rethink the
role of faculty in an environment where students are adept at
employing asynchronous learning opportunities?
Organizing to
Improve the Pipeline
-
What needs
to happen to improve the demographics of the professions by
2030?
-
Who should
lead and participate in this effort?
-
How can
these entities work together to effect real, positive change?
6:30PM
ABET Annual Awards
Banquet
Enjoy a plated dinner and network with long-time colleagues and new
acquaintances. Black tie
optional.
8AM-9:15AM
ABET President’s Breakfast and Annual Address
9:30AM-Noon
Adapting
to Millennial Learning Models
-
What
characteristics will describe students of the future
(demographics, learning styles, etc.)?
-
Will
educational paradigms change to meet the next generation’s need
for flexible and responsive pedagogies?
-
How will the
pervasive access to technology require programs to rethink the
role of faculty in an environment where students are adept at
employing asynchronous learning opportunities?
Organizing to
Improve the Pipeline
-
What needs
to happen to improve the demographics of the professions by
2030?
-
Who should
lead and participate in this effort?
-
How can
these entities work together to effect real, positive change?
Noon-1:30PM
Lunch on your own
1:30PM-3PM
Rethinking
Quality Assurance: Implications for ABET Policies, Procedures, and
Processes
-
How must
current accreditation processes and policies evolve in response
to new educational paradigms and the globalization of the ABET
professions?
-
How will
accreditation models need to be modified or rebuilt to
accommodate the necessary pedagogical changes and promote
innovation?
-
What
alternative accreditation-related and organizational models must
be considered to ensure that ABET remains relevant to its
constituencies?
3:00PM-4:00PM
Wrap-Up Panel
ABET leaders and topic experts respond to preliminary findings
from previous sessions.
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About the
Keynote
Keynote James J. Duderstadt is President Emeritus
and University Professor of Science and Engineering at the
University of Michigan, where he currently co-chairs the
university’s program in Science, Technology, and Public Policy and
directs the Millennium Project, a research center exploring the
impact of over-the-horizon technologies on society. Duderstadt has
served on or chaired numerous boards, including the National Science
Board, and many committees of the National Academies, including its
executive committee and the Committee on Science, Engineering, and
Public Policy. He has also served on the National Commission on the
Future of Higher Education. His national awards for research,
teaching, and service activities include the E.O. Lawrence Award for
excellence in nuclear research, the Arthur Holly Compton Prize for
outstanding teaching, the Reginald Wilson Award for national
leadership in achieving diversity, and the National Medal of
Technology for exemplary service to the nation. His teaching and
research interests have spanned a wide range of subjects in science,
mathematics, and engineering, including nuclear fission reactors,
thermonuclear fusion, high-powered lasers, computer simulation,
information technology, and policy development in areas such as
energy, education, and science. He has published more than 20 books
and 150 technical publications.
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